No. XXXII-XXXIII (2002)
Articles

Montenegro As Perceived by a British Diplomat: Hugh Rose's Report of 1852

Čedomir D. Antić
Institute for Balkan Studies, Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts

Published 01.12.2002

Keywords

  • Montenegro,
  • Balkans,
  • Hugh Rose,
  • British diplomacy,
  • Ottoman Empire

How to Cite

Antić, Čedomir D. (2002). Montenegro As Perceived by a British Diplomat: Hugh Rose’s Report of 1852. Balcanica - Annual of the Institute for Balkan Studies, (XXXII-XXXIII), 211–226. https://doi.org/10.2298/BALC0233211A

Abstract

The following article deals with the image of Montenegro, a little country from the South-east European periphery, as perceived by a member of the nineteenth century British political elite. The history of this petty entity, less populated than an average English city, became especially important on the eve of the Holly Places Crises (of Palestine, 1853). A single dispute over the Montenegro-Ottoman border threatened to turn into European war, just a year before the Crimean War commenced. In regard the Montenegrin question, the always sensitive European “balance of power” was upset with the appearance of the unexpected alliance between Russia and Austria. The unique interest of the British Empire then started, for a short period of time, to be tied in with this almost unknown principality. The attitude of British diplomacy to Montenegro, image of the principality reconstructed in the Colonel Hugh Rose’s report and its sources, could contribute not only to the advance the history of British foreign relations, but also to the development of the history of Montenegro.

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